Tavis McKenzie, a 34-year-old entrepreneur, found two $100 bills near the intersection of York Mills and Don Mills. He stayed in the area, waiting for the original owner of the cash to return and claim it, but no one came.

Instead of keeping the cash for himself, he opted to give half of it away.

"Found $200 bucks on the sidewalk. On a whim decided to surprise and delight the next person I saw," Tavis McKenzie wrote on Facebook.

"So pass it on, do something nice for the next person you see," he encouraged.

Helen Maslyk, who was experiencing tire problems on the way to a camping trip, spotted the roll of undeveloped film on the roadside near Victoria, British Columbia, during the May long weekend, CBC News reported.

She knew exactly what to do with the roll: she had the photos developed, then posted them to Facebook in an attempt to find their original owner.

"I'm the type of person (who thinks) everything happens for a reason so it didn’t even strike me as funny or strange to take it and want to go get it developed, find out what was on it and see if I could return it to the owner," Maslyk toldTODAY Moms.

A student walks in front of Hoover Tower on the Stanford University campus.New Delhi student Kartik Sawhney, 18, is visually impaired. India's Central Board of Secondary Education failed to cater to his condition, exempting him from math and science course because of their visual aspects.

This didn't stop the science-loving teen from fighting for his right to an education. With the help of his school and an NGO campaign, Kartik was able to negotiate his way into science classes.

"It was very difficult to convince the authorities to let me study science," Kartik told the Times of India. "For practicals, the teacher explained the apparatus and in the test, I got multiple choice questions based on the practical curriculum."

Kartik was even allowed to perform experiments, providing that they were non-hazardous.

George Abraham, CEO of Delhi-based Score Foundation, said that Kartik's case is an exceptional one:

"After class VIII, most blind were exempted from studying maths and science. They would

Laura Mae Davis Burlingame displays a copy of the first pages of the diary of Marine Cpl. Thomas Cotton Jones.

Laura Mae Davis Burlingame, 90, recently visited the National WWII Museum in New Orleans, Louisiana, hoping to see the exhibit commemorating Corporal Thomas "Cotton" Jones, the Marine who had been her high school sweetheart.

"It was a shock when I got up to the display and the first thing I see is this diary," she said.

Jones was killed in 1944, at the age of 22, by a Japanese sniper in the South Pacific. Before her died, he outlined his "last life request" in its pages:

In his very first entry, he described his diary as "my life history of my days in the U.S. Marine Corps...And most of all my love for Laura Mae for whom my heart is completely filled. So if you all get a chance please return it to her. I (am) writing this as my last life request."

Burlingame had given him the diary before he went overseas. She had never read its contents, nor did she know it survived

Graduation seat reserved for student who died of cancer (Courtesy Imgur.com)A photo of a reserved seat at a high school graduation has gone viral. Redditor Eldarz posted the photo of a framed picture of a young student propped on a chair before the ceremony.

"A friend of mine lost his life to cancer back in 8th grade, this is the year he would be graduating, they reserved a seat for him," he wrote.

"I was there tonight, after the ceremony seeing his father take pictures with it was heartbreaking," commented redditor Ashtwain. "The graduation was hosted in a basketball stadium, his father, when asked if he'd like to move closer, he replied with, 'No, when my son would come here to watch basketball games this is where he sat.'"

Ashtwain added, "While taking pictures, two of the son's best friends came over to take a picture as well, as soon as the father saw them he hugged them and they all broke down crying."

After some redditors criticized the gesture, another redditor, InLovngMemory, defended the decision to honour the late student — and wrote about the boy's

In the first five days of the fundraiser, more than $35,000 of the $50,000 goal has been raised. DeRuggiero hopes a corporate sponsor will match that goal.

"Before the CBS piece aired, I didn't know Barbara Garcia personally, but was incredibly moved by her story and of her reunion with her sweet dog, captured on CBS news (live) after the Moore, Oklahoma tornado on May 20th. Barbara could have been my mother, my